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McClatchy Washington Bureau
McClatchy Washington Bureau
National
Andrea Drusch

Ted Cruz continues crusade against health care law with few allies

WASHINGTON _ Ted Cruz is still on a crusade to wipe out the Affordable Care Act, but the effort is getting lonelier and lonelier.

Republican leaders are now publicly rooting against a Texas-led lawsuit that could eradicate the law in its entirety. Cruz laid the groundwork last year for the lawsuit's approach.

The GOP also largely ignored Cruz's pleas to make major changes to the law using only Republican votes in these final days when the party controls all of Congress. Democrats will run the House as of Jan. 3.

Fresh off an election where Republicans lost control of the House in large part due to attacks on their plans to overhaul the nation's health care system, GOP leaders desperately want to move on from an issue that's gone from political boon to an albatross.

"I'd like to see (the Texas lawsuit) go on appeal because I'm pretty sure it will be overturned and people won't have to worry about it," said Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., chairman of the Senate panel overseeing health.

"People ought to just take a deep breath and see what the Supreme Court does, maybe in a couple years from now," said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, the second-ranking Senate Republican. He's up for re-election in 2020.

Cruz, on the other hand, has never stopped dreaming up unorthodox approaches to end or severely water down the Affordable Care Act.

"Obamacare has been driving up premiums and hurting the people of Texas. It is long past time for Congress to address that directly," Cruz said of his lonely quest.

Texas has the country's highest rate of people who are uninsured, roughly 19 percent of its non-elderly population, according to a December report from the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan research group.

That rate has gone down since the Affordable Care Act began eight years ago, according to the report, but Texas has not taken advantage of the law's Medicaid expansion, as several GOP-led states have done.

Cruz, who once helped trigger a government shutdown in an attempt to defund some of the health care law's programs, urged GOP colleagues in a closed-door policy meeting last month to make changes to the health care law that he said would help people better afford insurance in his state.

His proposal would use an obscure budget tool that would make it difficult for Democrats to filibuster changes such as ending the law's employer mandate, which requires organizations with 50 or more full-time employees to provide minimum health care coverage. Cruz also suggested expanding health savings accounts, which allow people to put untaxed money aside for health care and to help pay for premiums.

"I made that case to my colleagues emphatically because the Democratic obstruction we're seeing right now, that handwriting was on the wall," Cruz said of his push to use the budget tool.

Doing so could have allowed his party to tackle a host of remaining policy goals, including securing funding for Trump's wall _ the disagreement that caused the government to go into a partial shutdown. Trump himself suggested using the option to get the wall funded, but it was quickly rejected by senators from both parties.

The Texas lawsuit, though, could still force lawmakers to return to the issue of health care, if the suit is upheld by higher courts.

Earlier this month a Fort Worth judge said the entire law became unconstitutional when Republicans removed a provision that forced people to pay a fine if they don't have health insurance.

Though Cruz has encouraged the lawsuit as a promising vehicle to deliver big changes on the Affordable Care Act, other Republicans who supported Cruz's plan to delete the individual mandate openly detest using the courts to gut the rest of the law.

It was "very explicitly stated by the people who were (driving that effort) ... that this was not to affect other parts (of the Affordable Care Act)," Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a physician, said of the case.

Cassidy is now working with Democrats on potential changes aimed at lowering premiums.

Cruz was one of the few Republicans in a competitive re-election race in 2018 who didn't face a barrage of attack ads from his opponent over health care.

Asked about potential solutions if the lawsuit succeeds, he pointed to ideas he pushed to include in the Senate's Republican-led effort to replace the Affordable Care Act last year.

Cruz's provision would allow insurance companies to sell cheaper plans to healthy people, as long as the firms continue to offer plans to people with pre-existing conditions.

The Senate Republicans' plan was defeated 51-49.

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